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Friday, November 29, 2013

Guest Post + Giveaway (INT)- Out of the Cave by Cotton E. Davis

Hello, readers! Today we are spotlighting a very interesting historical cum futuristic book on our blog. It's called Out of the Cave and is written by Edward Davis under the pen name of Cotton E. Davis.

I wish I could squeeze in this book in my reading schedule, but a huge pile of review books and exams has made it difficult. Nonetheless, if it's not me- it can be you. There's a giveaway for the book below in this post where you can win an e-copy of the book from the author.

We also have a super interesting Guest Post in the form of a Character Interview with the protagonist Adam for you. We've done both individually before but never in one single post so this is a first and a one of it's kind post.

Without much ado, let's get to know the book more!

GOODREADS SUMMARY:

A neaderthal boy is time transported to the 21st century and eventually mainstreamed into a public high school.

The year is 2036. Fifteen-year-old-Kelly Tracer moves to Rivertown, Missouri, population 1900, where she enrolls in the local high school to begin her sophomore year. Imagine Kelly's surprise when she learns of another newcomer to Rivertown High, a sophomore like herself: a boy from 40,000 years in the past. A Neanderthal.

Further imagine Kelly's shock when she learns Neanderthals were not fellow Homo sapiens but were instead a seperate species of humans unto themselves. She remembers the boy being time transported to the twenty-first century from watching the news when she was six years old. Now, nine years later, he is being mainstreamed.

Kelly is further surprised when she sees Adam (the name humans have given him) in the flesh. Like his long-extinct people, he is heavily muscled with thick brow ridges above his eyes and possessed of a protruding muzzle of a mouth and only a slight chin. Then there is his humongous, spreading nose. More thuggish than simian-looking, Adam's primitive looks put Kelly off. Scare her even.

Kelly gets another surprise. Adam speaks English like an American. Raised by scientists since his sixth year, he sounds just like any other American kid, except for a touch of bass in his voice's timbre. Also, Adam is nothing like the dully fierce caveman stereotype Kelly expected. Aside from being shy, he is mild and thoughtful and quite considerate of the feelings of others. Adam is also very mature for his few years; an evolutionary response, according to his paleoanthropologist adoptive father, to living in the harsh conditions of a major Ice Age.

Not surprisingly, Kelly finds herself liking him.

You guessed it, Kelly and Adam will eventually become an item. But, before that, they'll go through enough tribulations to try the patience of a saint. After-all, the world is no more perfect in the year 2036 than it was in Adam's time.

My author's nom de plume is Cotton E. Davis, "Cotton" being a nickname I was given in high school. My real name is Edward Davis. I'm sixty-seven years old and have been retired for the past ten years, more or less Forrest Gumping my way through the past five or six decades of my so-called life. I was born in Washington, Missouri in 1946. I joined the U.S. Air Force in 1965 where I served first as a ground and later air radio operator, the last two years of which were spent in the country of Thailand. There, I was part of an air crew that flew reconnaissance missions over Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. I also served as a sort of de facto squadron interpreter between my outfit's administration and its Thai employees. Discharged in 1969, I worked for a year, then attended college at the University of Missouri, where I earned (if that's the word) a degree in journalism. I've worked as a reporter on three newspapers, was a freelance magazine writer for some years, but mainly managed businesses on both coasts of the U.S. I retired from working for the City of Spokane, Washington in 2003 and am now struggling to write novels in my spare time.

GUEST POST:

It's now time for that interesting one of it's kind post I told you about. I'm excited for you to read it and I hope you enjoy it just as much I did when I first read it. Happy reading!

INTERVIEW WITH A VAM...NEANDERTHAL

Interviewer:

"This is the first time I've ever spoken to a book character."

Adam the Neanderthal man:

"You were expecting Anne of Green Gables, maybe?"

Interviewer:

"No offense, but you look scary...especially now that you're fully grown."

Adam:

"Just be glad I'm not the Frankenstein monster or Grendel."

Interviewer:

"What are you, in you're mid-fifties? You were a teenager in the pages of Out of the Cave."

Adam (grinning):

"I was even more clueless than human teens at the time."

Interviewer:

"I'm told you have a sense of humor."

Adam:

"We Neanderthals even smiled occasionally."

Interviewer (laughs):

"I'm a little surprised."

Adam:

"Didn't you read Out of the Cave?"

Interviewer:

"My shock comes not so much from your being a Neanderthal. It's more your...."

Adam:

"Looks. They've been described as primitive and subhuman. Brutish even."

I hope you all enjoyed this post because I sure enjoyed putting it up for you. Before we end, I'd like to thank Edward for stopping by the blog today, for a superb Guest Post and for the generous offer to give away a copy of his book. Thank you, Ed! Thank you, readers, for stopping by!

This sounds like a fun read! I like stories where the main character travels to a different time! Good Luck on your exams Sarika! I don't know how you are able to blog so consistently while you're going to college. It just shows what a hard and dedicated person you are. I loved the interview! It was very humorous!!!